Generally, yes. In the old days, the MLA stylebook recommended underlining the names of books and magazines. These days, italics seem to be the preferred method in academic papers. She was excited when her essay about The Beatles was published by Rolling Stone.
Yes, the name of a journal should be italicized in academic writing to indicate that it is a title of a publication.
Yes. It is a name of a magazine then it should be capitalized.
Articles are typically italicized in writing when they are part of a larger work, such as a book title or a publication name.
The name of a magazine should be, of course, capitalized, and it can either be underlined or italicized.
Yes; the article title should be placed inside quotation marks, while the name of the newspaper or magazine is italicized.
name of a book
No it should not be italicized. If you are referring to a specific train then it should be capitalized. If the name of the train appears in a title of an article, book etc then it should be italicized in that case.
It should be italicized.
The correct way to write the binomial name of a human is Homo sapiens. In this notation, the genus name (Homo) is capitalized and italicized, while the species name (sapiens) is in lowercase and also italicized. When writing it in text, it should be formatted in italics or, if handwritten, underlined.
The name of a newspaper is italicized. Underlining is a hold-over from the days of the typewriter, when there was no way to change the actual letters.
Well there is many scientific names but you have to make sure that it make sense
Not when you use its 'normal' name, like for instance flu, cancer or pneumonia. Only a disease's Latin name often is italicized.